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Publication : Inhalation carcinogenicity and chronic toxicity of carbon tetrachloride in rats and mice.

First Author  Nagano K Year  2007
Journal  Inhal Toxicol Volume  19
Issue  13 Pages  1089-103
PubMed ID  17957549 Mgi Jnum  J:140821
Mgi Id  MGI:3814660 Doi  10.1080/08958370701628770
Citation  Nagano K, et al. (2007) Inhalation carcinogenicity and chronic toxicity of carbon tetrachloride in rats and mice. Inhal Toxicol 19(13):1089-103
abstractText  Carcinogenicity and chronic toxicity of carbon tetrachloride were examined by inhalation exposure of 50 F344 rats and 50 BDF1 mice of both sexes to carbon tetrachloride at 0 (clean air), 5, 25, or 125 ppm (v/v) for 6 h/day, 5 days/wk, for 104 wk. Incidences of hepatocellular adenomas and carcinomas in rats and mice of both sexes and of adrenal pheochromocytomas in mice of both sexes were significantly increased dose-dependently. Hepatocellular carcinomas and cirrhosis significantly occurred in the 125-ppm-exposed rats of both sexes, and 3 cases of hepatocellular carcinomas and increased incidences of hepatic altered cell foci were noted in the 25-ppm-exposed female rats. Hepatocellular carcinomas were induced in mice of both sexes at 25 and 125 ppm, and hepatocellular adenomas occurred in females at 5 ppm without any degenerative or necrotic change in hepatocytes. Hepatocellular carcinomas metastasized to the lung. The chronic hepatotoxicity was characterized by cirrhosis, fibrosis, and fatty change in rats, and ceroid deposition, bile-duct proliferation, and hydropic change in mice. Survival rates were decreased in the 125-ppm-exposed rats and mice of both sexes and in the 25-ppm-exposed female mice, in association with decreased body weights. The decreased survival rates were considered to be causally related to both various tumors including hepatocellular carcinomas and severe chronic progressive nephropathy in rats and to hepatocellular carcinomas in mice. This study provided clear evidence of carcinogenicity for carbon tetrachloride in rats and mice. A cytotoxic-proliferative and genotoxic mode of action for carbon tetrachloride-induced hepatocarcinogenesis was suggested.
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